Air Filter Replacement Salt Lake City | MERV 8-13

Air Filter Replacement in Salt Lake County

September 12, 2024. A new customer named Aaron M. on Penrose Drive in Federal Heights called us with an unusual diagnostic concern: his 2017 Carrier Performance 59TP6 furnace was tripping the high-limit switch repeatedly during a brief heating cycle on a cool autumn morning. He’d just replaced the filter himself the previous weekend — a 16x25x1 fiberglass panel from Home Depot. Eli Tran arrived 38 minutes after dispatch, pulled the side door of the furnace, and immediately spotted the problem: Aaron had installed a 16x25x1 MERV 13 pleated filter where the manufacturer specified MERV 8 or lower for the 1-inch slot. The pleated filter’s higher static pressure exceeded the ECM blower’s design point at standard speed. Static pressure across the air handler measured 0.78 inches WC with the new filter installed; manufacturer max for this equipment is 0.50 inches WC. The blower was straining, the heat exchanger was overheating from inadequate airflow, the limit switch was tripping correctly to protect the equipment. Solution wasn’t to remove the high-MERV filter — Aaron specifically wanted the better filtration for his asthma. Instead, we removed the filter cabinet limitation by installing an AprilAire 213 4-inch deep MERV 13 media filter housing in the return duct. Same MERV 13 filtration efficiency, but with 4x the filter surface area (lower air velocity, lower static pressure) and the equipment back to operating within design specs. Total project: $385 installed, including the new media filter cabinet, mounting, ductwork modifications, and post-install static pressure verification. Aaron’s heating cycles ran normally afterward; his MERV 13 filtration was preserved without stressing the equipment.

Filter replacement seems like the most basic HVAC maintenance task — you remove the old filter and put in a new one. In practice, getting it right involves a half-dozen variables that most homeowners and even some HVAC contractors don’t understand correctly: filter size, MERV rating compatibility with your equipment, replacement frequency, static pressure implications, and the difference between cheap fiberglass panels and quality pleated media. Below is what we know about residential HVAC filter selection and replacement, what we offer (subscription service through our Comfort Care plan, or on-demand replacement), and how to think about the trade-offs. For broader IAQ context see the indoor air quality services hub.

Filter Types and What They Capture

Fiberglass Panel Filters (MERV 1-4)

What they are:
Inexpensive disposable filters with loose fiberglass media. Available in standard 1-inch thicknesses at any home improvement store for $1-$5 each.
What they capture:
Large lint, hair, fibers. Roughly 5-10% of airborne particulates above 3 microns. Essentially nothing below 3 microns.
What they don’t capture:
Most pollen, all PM2.5, mold spores, bacteria, virus carriers, smoke, dust mite material. Essentially zero protection for indoor air quality concerns.
Equipment impact:
Lowest static pressure of any filter type — doesn’t strain the blower. The original “minimum equipment protection” filter category.
When to use:
Almost never. Even renters with cheap landlord systems benefit from at least MERV 8 pleated upgrade ($15-$25 retail) for minimal cost increase.

Pleated 1-Inch Filters (MERV 5-11)

What they are:
Disposable filters with synthetic media folded in a pleated pattern to increase surface area within the 1-inch frame. Available everywhere for $8-$25 each.
MERV 8 (most common):
Captures 70%+ of particles 3-10 microns. Pollen, dust mites, mold spores, larger pet dander. Standard residential default.
MERV 11 (mid-tier upgrade):
Captures 65%+ of particles 1-3 microns plus everything MERV 8 captures. Better for households with allergies or pets.
MERV 13 in 1-inch (specialty product):
Some manufacturers produce 1-inch MERV 13 filters. Use with caution: static pressure significantly exceeds standard 1-inch filter and may stress your equipment beyond design limits. We verify static pressure compatibility before recommending 1-inch MERV 13.
Replacement frequency:
30-90 days depending on filter quality, household conditions (pets, smoking, construction nearby), and equipment runtime. We typically recommend 60-day intervals for typical households.
Cost:
$8-$25 per filter retail. Subscription service through Comfort Care plan included in annual fee.

4-Inch and 5-Inch Deep Pleated Filters (MERV 11-16)

What they are:
Deep media filters installed in dedicated filter cabinets — not the standard 1-inch filter slot. Filter cabinet typically installed in return ductwork by an HVAC contractor.
MERV 13 (the sweet spot for residential IAQ):
Captures 75%+ of particles 0.3-1 micron plus everything MERV 8 and 11 capture. PM2.5, smoke, bacteria, virus carriers. The standard recommendation for serious residential air quality improvement.
MERV 14-16 (specialty applications):
Higher efficiency at the cost of significantly higher static pressure. Most residential equipment isn’t rated for MERV 14+; static pressure check required before installation.
Common brands and models:
  • AprilAire 213 (16x25x4): MERV 13, most common residential installation
  • AprilAire 413 (16x25x4): MERV 13, equivalent to 213 with different cabinet design
  • AprilAire 510 (20x25x5): MERV 11 in 5-inch depth for larger systems
  • Honeywell F100 (16x25x5): MERV 11, 5-inch depth, electronic upgrade available
  • Honeywell F200 (20x25x5): MERV 13, premium 5-inch depth
  • Carrier Performance 30 (16x25x5): Carrier OEM media filter, MERV 13
  • Lennox PCO16-16 (16x25x4): MERV 16, requires equipment compatibility verification
Replacement frequency:
6-12 months typical depending on filter type and household conditions. The deeper filter media provides much longer service life than 1-inch alternatives.
Cost:
$35-$85 per filter retail. Filter cabinet installation: $285-$485 one-time. Significant long-term cost reduction vs. frequent 1-inch filter replacement.

HEPA Filtration (99.97% at 0.3 micron)

What it is:
True HEPA filtration. Standard for cleanrooms and medical applications.
Implementation in residential HVAC:
Generally not appropriate for standard residential return duct filter slots due to extreme static pressure. HEPA-grade filtration in residential applications uses either dedicated HEPA filter housings with bypass airflow (commercial installations), whole-house electronic air cleaners that achieve HEPA-equivalent particle removal at lower static pressure cost, or standalone HEPA units (with dedicated blowers) for room-level filtration.
See also:
The air purifiers page covers HEPA standalone units and HEPA-equivalent whole-house systems.

How to Choose Filter Type and MERV Rating

Step 1: Verify equipment compatibility.
Different HVAC equipment has different static pressure tolerance. Older equipment (pre-2010) typically can’t handle MERV 13 1-inch filters; some newer equipment can. We measure total external static pressure during HVAC tune-ups and verify filter compatibility. The equipment nameplate or manufacturer documentation indicates maximum static pressure rating.
Step 2: Determine your IAQ needs.
  • Healthy household, no specific concerns: MERV 8 pleated is adequate
  • Allergies, asthma, household pets: MERV 11 minimum, MERV 13 ideal
  • Severe respiratory sensitivity, inversion-season concerns, wildfire smoke season: MERV 13 in 4-5 inch media or electronic air cleaner
  • Immunocompromised household members: MERV 13 base plus standalone HEPA in primary occupied rooms
Step 3: Choose filter depth based on equipment compatibility and budget.
1-inch MERV 8 or MERV 11 filters work in standard return slots and are widely available. 4-5 inch deep media filters require dedicated cabinet installation ($285-$485 one-time) but provide better filtration with longer replacement intervals.
Step 4: Set up sustainable replacement schedule.
1-inch filters: 30-90 days replacement. 4-5 inch deep media: 6-12 months. Subscription service (included in Comfort Care plan) or self-replacement with set calendar reminders.

Subscription Filter Service

Most homeowners forget to replace filters on schedule. Our subscription service handles this:

Included in Comfort Care plan ($189/year):
  • Standard 1-inch pleated MERV 8 filter replacement at each tune-up visit (spring AC + fall furnace = 2 filters/year)
  • High-MERV media filter replacement at the same visits (one or two per year depending on size and load)
  • Filter delivery and installation
  • Filter quality verification (manufacturer authenticity check)
Standalone subscription (no other Comfort Care benefits):
$95/year for standard 1-inch MERV 8 filter (4 deliveries per year). $145/year for MERV 11. $185-$245/year for 4-5 inch deep MERV 13 media filters depending on size. Delivered to your door with replacement instructions, or installed during separate service visit ($45-$85 additional per visit).
One-time filter replacement service:
$45-$85 per visit (filter cost not included). Used by customers who don’t want subscription but want professional installation.

Common Filter Mistakes

Mistake 1: Installing higher-MERV filter than equipment can handle.
The Aaron M. case study above. Higher-MERV filters in standard 1-inch slots create static pressure that stresses blowers and can trip high-limit switches. We verify equipment static pressure tolerance before recommending high-MERV installations.
Mistake 2: Wrong filter size.
16x25x1 is the most common residential size but many homes have 20x25x1, 16x20x1, 14x25x1, or other variations. Installing the wrong size leaves gaps that bypass filtration, sometimes called “filter bypass.” We verify correct size during installation and tune-up visits.
Mistake 3: Forgetting to replace.
Old clogged filters create the same static pressure problems as wrong-MERV installations, plus they restrict airflow and reduce heating/cooling efficiency. Subscription service eliminates the forgetting problem.
Mistake 4: Buying counterfeit filters online.
Increasingly common problem: legitimate brand name filters available on Amazon and other marketplaces are sometimes counterfeit knock-offs with significantly lower performance than authentic versions. Subscription service through us guarantees authentic OEM filters.
Mistake 5: Installing filter backwards.
Pleated filters have a directional airflow arrow on the side. Installing backwards reduces filtration efficiency and may damage the filter media. We verify orientation during professional installations.
Mistake 6: Skipping filter replacement during peak season.
Heavy use periods (peak summer AC, peak winter heating) load filters faster than typical periods. A filter that lasts 60 days during shoulder season may need replacement at 30 days during peak season.

Pricing Reference (Q2 2026)

One-time filter replacement service (filter cost separate):
$45-$85 per visit. Typical for customers who buy their own filters but want professional installation.
One-time filter replacement WITH filter:
$65-$165 depending on filter type and size.
4-5 inch deep media filter cabinet installation:
$285-$485 installed. One-time installation; filters then last 6-12 months between replacements.
Comfort Care plan ($189/year):
Includes filter replacement at each tune-up visit (2x per year). Standard MERV 8 included; upgrades available at filter cost.
Subscription filter delivery (standalone):
  • MERV 8 1-inch (4 per year): $95/year
  • MERV 11 1-inch (4 per year): $145/year
  • MERV 13 4-5 inch deep media (1-2 per year): $185-$245/year
  • Delivered to door; self-replacement
  • Installation visits available at $45-$85 each
Specialty filter applications:
  • Multi-system households: each additional system at 50% discount on subscription
  • High-runtime systems (commercial, home office with significant load): more frequent replacement intervals discussed individually
  • Activated carbon filters (for VOC concerns): $45-$95 per filter, typically every 3-6 months

Common Concerns

Can I install higher-MERV filters than my equipment specifies?
Sometimes yes, sometimes no. The equipment’s static pressure rating is the limiting factor. Older equipment (pre-2010) typically can’t handle MERV 13 1-inch filters; newer equipment with variable-speed ECM blowers usually can. We measure total external static pressure during tune-up visits and verify filter compatibility before recommending upgrades. Alternative: install a 4-5 inch deep media filter cabinet (lower static pressure for the same MERV rating) instead of forcing a high-MERV 1-inch filter on incompatible equipment.
How often should I really replace filters?
Depends on filter type, household conditions, and equipment runtime. General guidelines: fiberglass 1-inch (which we don’t recommend) every 30 days; MERV 8 1-inch pleated every 60-90 days; MERV 11 1-inch pleated every 60 days; 4-5 inch deep MERV 13 every 6-12 months. Households with pets, smoking, or recent construction reduce these intervals by 30-50%. Equipment runtime during peak heating/cooling seasons accelerates replacement need.
Are expensive filters worth it?
For most households, MERV 11 pleated 1-inch ($12-$18) provides significant improvement over basic MERV 8 ($8-$12) without static pressure concerns. For households with allergies, asthma, pets, or pollution sensitivity, MERV 13 (either 1-inch with equipment compatibility verification or 4-5 inch deep media) provides meaningful additional benefit. Beyond MERV 13, the benefits diminish significantly while costs increase — “5 STAR MERV 17 SUPER-ULTRA HEPA-EQUIVALENT” marketing claims are typically not legitimate filtration improvements.
What’s the difference between MERV and MPR/FPR ratings?
MERV (Minimum Efficiency Reporting Value) is the ASHRAE 52.2 industry standard. MPR (Microparticle Performance Rating, 3M) and FPR (Filter Performance Rating, Home Depot) are proprietary scales used by specific brands. Rough conversions: MERV 8 = MPR 600 = FPR 5; MERV 11 = MPR 1000 = FPR 7; MERV 13 = MPR 1500 = FPR 9-10. The MERV scale is universal; MPR and FPR are brand-specific marketing.
Do I need to oil my furnace filter?
No. Modern residential filters are not oiled. The “oiled filter” technology was used in some older fiberglass filters but is essentially obsolete in residential HVAC. Standard practice is fresh disposable filter replacement.

Frequently Asked Questions

How can I tell when my filter needs replacement?
Visual inspection works for obvious cases (gray or black with accumulated dust). Quantitative methods: hold the filter up to a light source; if you can barely see light through it, it’s overdue. Static pressure measurement during HVAC service visits indicates filter loading; significant increase from baseline indicates replacement needed. Some smart thermostats now monitor filter loading and alert you. The 60-90 day calendar reminder remains the most reliable trigger for routine residential systems.
Will a clogged filter damage my furnace or AC?
Yes, eventually. Restricted airflow causes the furnace heat exchanger to overheat (potentially cracking it over time) and causes the AC evaporator coil to freeze (which damages the compressor if operated for extended periods with iced coil). Clogged filters also stress the blower motor (PSC blower runs at higher amp draw; ECM blower runs at higher speed to compensate). Replacing filters on schedule is one of the cheapest forms of HVAC protection.
Can I wash and reuse my filter?
Most disposable filters — including all pleated and media filters — cannot be washed and reused. The media is designed for one-pass airflow and washing damages it. Specialty “washable” or “permanent” filters do exist but require careful drying before reinstallation and provide significantly lower filtration efficiency than disposable equivalents. We recommend disposable filters with subscription replacement for best long-term value.
Should I use scented filters?
Generally no. “Scented” filters use fragrance chemicals that release into your supply air during operation. People with chemical sensitivities, allergies, or respiratory conditions may find these problematic. The filtration performance is identical to unscented equivalents; the only difference is the added fragrance. We don’t recommend scented filters for any application.
What about anti-microbial filters?
Mixed evidence. Some filters use silver-impregnated or other antimicrobial-treated media. The marketing claims around bacterial growth on filters are often overstated — standard pleated filters in normal residential applications don’t typically support significant bacterial growth. The additional cost may not deliver meaningful benefit. UV-C lamp on the coil (see the UV light treatment page) is a more reliable way to address biological growth concerns than relying on filter antimicrobial treatments.

Set Up Filter Service

Subscription delivery, professional installation, or one-time service available. Filter service is one of the lowest-cost HVAC maintenance categories — don’t skip it.

Set Up Service →

Office Hours

  • Emergency Service: 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
  • Office Staff: Monday – Friday, 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Closed: Weekends and State/Federal Holidays (emergency line always active)